Patrick jephson not intended for republication or sale selected royal journalism
Download 240.66 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- PRINCE WILLIAM MISSES THE QUEEN’S BIRTHDAY PARADE
A TALE OF THREE PRINCES Loyal monarchists are having a tough weekend, assailed by a story that the heir to the throne influenced BBC schedules to shield innocent viewers’ eyes from some dark secret. If this weren’t enough, we also learn that his brother the Duke of York is implicated in an underage sex scandal. And though we may prefer to believe predictable palace promises that there is no trace of truth in either story, much damage has already been done. Even here in America, the august New York Times is repeating the allegations against both Charles and Andrew, as are mainstream TV news stations. Does it matter? For an answer, where better to look than American viewers’ oracle on all things British, Downton Abbey: “The truth is neither here nor there. It’s the look of the thing that matters.” says the Dowager Countess of Grantham, surely channelling the late Queen Mother. Whichever way you read this weekend’s royal headlines, it sure ain’t looking good. This is all the more disappointing if you consider that just before Christmas American airwaves – and those of much of the world – were filled with chirpy coverage of William and Catherine’s reliably wholesome visit to New York. Even with Catherine’s endearingly unrehearsed side-eye glance at a bossy schoolteacher, the couple lacked the star power exerted by William’s mother when she hugged an AIDS baby in Harlem 25 years ago. But they nevertheless sent a reassuring message of dependability to any who were wondering about the long term bankability of brand Windsor. Now all that good work has been undone. Far from reassuring, the current message is of a dynasty in the grip of paranoia about a documentary made by the UK’s national broadcaster and a sex saga that owes more to the Borgias than the bourgeois monarchy of the Middleton era. To find a clue about the cause of the current stinky headlines we must cast our minds back to William’s mother. The BBC documentary that has so alarmed Clarence House is said to reveal the less than high-minded tactics allegedly used by Charles’s advisors to rebalance the popularity see-saw away from her and towards him. The programme is also believed to explore how the same tactics were used to assist Mrs. Parker-Bowles’s smooth ascent to queen-in- waiting. There is much about this unsavoury chapter that deserves to be forgotten, if only in the interests of public good taste. Those who lived through it may still struggle to believe – let alone forgive – the way in which our foremost national institution was entrusted to the unscrupulous hands of political-style spin doctors. Their potions included that elementary rule SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 122 of personality politics: make your client look good by making the competition look worse. Even if, as in this case, that includes members of your client’s own family. It seems likely that the BBC documentary has lifted the lid on that dormant cauldron and even a whiff of what might escape has Clarence House speed dialing its lawyers. Whoever else deserves our sympathy in this mess, it must surely include the current intake of royal image managers trying to comprehend the excesses of their predecessors. They may also ask why it was necessary to take such risks with fragile royal reputations just to advance one man’s battle with a long-dead princess. It is ironic that news of Prince Andrew’s difficulties should conveniently surface just when needed to sweep allegations of Clarence House’s BBC gagging from the headlines. There was a time when such remarkable synchronicity could have been unerringly traced back to the fretful Wales camp. Those days are mercifully in the past but the Duke of York’s often-unfairly battered reputation is undoubtedly under assault as never before. Too late now to regret bad friendship choices made long ago under the hot Caribbean sun; the billionaire friend turned out to be a sexual predator into whose debt the Duke and his wife should never have stumbled. At least we may give thanks that unlike Sir James Savile and Prince Charles, no photos exist of Andrew and this pervert wearing kilts and broad smiles. What few spin doctors like to admit is that their clients’ reputations are more often than not raised or reviled by the capriciousness of the news cycle rather than any expensive media strategy, even one crafted by royal appointment. So the time-honored regal response to bad news – ignore it and it will go away – may very well work just fine in these circumstances. Unfortunately, however, the Prince of Wales’s advisors have chosen a more confrontational path. It’s one that risks attracting legitimate concern about royalty’s unseen influence over many aspects of national life, and not just in the media. Meanwhile William and Catherine, now the popular fixtures in monarchy’s centre-stage, may be forgiven for some frustration at finding their faultless performance cast against such a dismal backdrop. They may also wonder – like the rest of us – why in the royal world the look of the thing and the truth can’t co-exist a little more happily. For guidance on how to make those willful nags trot in harness, they need look no further than William’s grandmother. SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 123 SECTION 5 Your royal highnesses SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 124 SUNDAY TELEGRAPH 4th April 2004 MISS MIDDLETON AND THE PRESS Photographs of Prince William skiing with a girl companion [Kate Middleton] made the front page – and many of the inside pages – of The Sun on Thursday. A suitable distraction from real news, you might think, on All Fools Day. But since this story – or a version of it – is likely to consume a king’s ransom in paparazzi fees over the next decade or so, this may be a good moment to consider its more serious implications. As is well known, the prince and the press have been enjoying an extended honeymoon. While he was a teenager, a PCC-brokered deal to leave him alone was obeyed by the royal press rat pack with almost miraculous self-restraint. It’s less than a year since William went out of his way, in a rare interview, to put his gratitude on record. Now, the next expression of royal gratitude may be indefinitely delayed. Since William turned twenty-one, the PCC have lifted their strict monitoring of the deal and it was therefore only a matter of time before somebody threw such unaccustomed restraint aside. All it needed was a big enough story. Now, with pictures that they can claim are potentially of a future queen – and hence “in the public interest” – Britain’s biggest-selling newspaper has found a story that’s big and fluffy enough to knock a hole in the wall around the prince’s privacy. Barely pausing to condemn such audacity, most papers have poured through the breach waving royal romance stories of their own and overlooking a significant irony. The original privacy deal was framed by the chairman of the PCC’s code of conduct committee, Les Hinton - a senior executive in NewsCorp, The Sun’s publishers. Poor William. One of his worst fears has been realised: he has been stalked, photographed and exploited. This is harassment and the culprits have rubbed salt in the wound by claiming that such covert pictures enable his fans back home to share his alleged joy at having “got a girl.” The don of tabloid snappers, Jason Fraser, invites us to share the young couple’s happiness. How disingenuous can you get? But perhaps it isn’t quite as simple as that. In the tortuous relationship between royals and media reptiles, it seldom is. We can imagine the prince’s reaction. In his father’s household, his rare communications are treated with respect bordering on trepidation. William’s anger and/or distress will have electrified the Clarence House press office. The call will have gone out – armies must be mobilised to avenge such a flagrant violation of the prince’s privacy. A blistering example must be made of the perpetrators. We may not be able to clap the offenders in the Tower but, by God, we’ll teach them not to mess with us! We might also imagine that Prince Charles’s new communications secretary, Paddy Harverson, will have seen The Sun’s coup as a personal challenge. Jason Fraser may have confidently SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 125 predicted that Clarence House wouldn’t retaliate. Mr. Harverson may have concluded that it was a dare he couldn’t refuse. Retaliation swiftly followed, therefore. Clarence House has banned The Sun indefinitely from covering official William or Harry photo calls. The Sun, in turn, has branded Clarence House guilty of cruel persecution of their lovable snapper-in-chief, Arthur Edwards who, they pointed out, hadn’t even taken the offending shots. The paper’s editors can have expected no less. Luckily, their readers don’t have to choose between sympathy for Arfur and sympathy for William. They can, as always, enjoy the pictures and simultaneously tut tut at the sneaky way they were obtained. It’s a time-honored tradition, the media equivalent of the Changing of the Guard. Ten years ago I was witness to an earlier example of the tradition. I was in Cairo with The Princess of Wales on an official tour. She liked to begin each day with an invigorating dip in the ambassador’s outdoor swimming pool. One morning her swim was covertly photographed by freelance members of the British press party who had bribed their way onto the roof of a building that overlooked the embassy garden. The pictures – though they undoubtedly showed her to be in prime physical shape – enraged Diana. The press secretary rushed to turn her anger into tangible punishment. The offenders were banned from press facilities for the rest of the tour. There it could have rested. The victim had been avenged. The culprits had been vilified. The innocent majority of the press party (including Arthur Edwards, working towards his MBE) glowed with righteousness. That was when Diana got cold feet. Her sensitive antennae quickly detected rumblings in the press camp, among whom something like union solidarity could flare up with disconcerting speed. What was the point of expending all this effort on making the tour a success if the customary blanket coverage of its most photogenic moments was now jeopardised? The swift retaliation went discreetly into reverse. It wasn’t a climb-down, heavens no. We, after all, owned the moral high ground. But, like it or not, Diana depended on a friendly rat pack just as it depended on her. And, such was Diana’s luck that, within days, she was able to send her own doctor to minister to Arfur, stricken with an Egyptian tummy bug. Now that was PR. I don’t suppose Mr. Harverson knew about Diana’s experience but he’s plainly no mug. He knows that William, no less than his brother and father, can’t afford to make a deadly enemy out of Arfur and his employers. An inheritance of the reign of the previous Clarence House spin doctor is that The Sun, like the rest of Fleet Street, is accustomed to being wooed by Charles’s minders. Forget the trade in official gifts; the real scandal of the prince’s household was the trade in royal exclusives, particularly William exclusives. SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 126 Having wittingly or otherwise been a party to that trade – which saw stories suppressed as well as splashed – it’s not in William’s interest to overplay the martyr card. Mr. Harverson seems to agree. The PCC, once the guard dog protecting William’s privacy, has been allowed to sleep undisturbed by complaints from Clarence House. Buckingham Palace press office, so keen in the past to weigh in against offenders, has made clear its aloofness from the brawl. And the length of The Sun’s ban is unspecified, suggesting that so long as Arthur Edwards MBE doesn’t misuse his enforced free time, there may be remission for good behaviour. Already, favoured diarists are clearly being briefed that The Sun’s portrayal of young love isn’t love, actually – let alone Love Actually. Meanwhile, what of the undisputedly innocent player in the melodrama? Perhaps Miss Middleton, William’s companion, will be our future queen. More likely, she will not. For better or for worse, the royal whirlwind will put her down again as suddenly as it has picked her up. Gently, we hope. As Clarence House may have noticed from recent history, spinning a happy ending for a royal romance is a lot more difficult than bashing old chums at The Sun. SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 127 THE GUARDIAN Saturday Essay 24 th JUNE 2006 PRINCE WILLIAM MISSES THE QUEEN’S BIRTHDAY PARADE Last Saturday was the Queen’s official birthday. The military splendour of Trooping the Colour evokes strong passions in all loyal subjects. My contribution to the special day was to lie in bed too long before hurriedly donning the full dress uniform of the weekend freelance writer: flip flops, shorts and a baggy tee shirt. Plus a big hat to keep the sun off. No bears were harmed in the making of this headgear. Armed with orders from the Commander in Chief I marched to Sainsbury’s where I joined a battalion of footsloggers doing our duty among the gleaming rows of bottles and tins. Rousing muzak filled the air. Everybody knew the drill and nobody on parade fainted from the heat. Such confident professionalism takes years of practice. Many complicated trolley manoeuvres later I began the procession back to barracks, acknowledging with a nonchalant salute the traditional greetings of Big Issue sellers and charity muggers as I went. Allowing time for a short tiffin break – iced latte and a glance at The Mail – I was back at base by 11.30 hours. There I allowed myself a brief moment of modest pride. It’s true: We British do these things better than anybody else in the world. With the ceremonial over for the day, I wondered what to do next. Walking back from the shops, I’d heard snatches of military music drifting on the breeze. Since we live so close to Buckingham Palace my wife – being American - suggested we should wander up to The Mall to see the fun. So we did. And jolly good it was, too – especially with a vintage Lancaster bomber leading the fly-past. Each to his own. Some miles to the west, Prince William and Kate Middleton were enjoying a strenuous day at the polo ground. Being in the middle of his Sandhurst course, perhaps William didn’t feel the need for marching at weekends too and decided to make the most of his leave. So instead of waving from the balcony of BP he was at play in the sunshine under the loving gaze of the girl he calls “my adorable Kate.” Quite right too – especially since, without any serious denial from royal sources, this young woman is now being widely touted as our future queen. (Camilla can be discounted for the role, having repeatedly said she doesn’t want it). Nevertheless, that didn’t stop several commentators accusing the Prince of being absent from place of duty. Perhaps they had forgotten that for William – and, possibly, Kate too – Troopings of the Colour will be an unavoidable annual ritual until he dies. So chukka off. Forgive the levity. Eight years as equerry and Private Secretary to the Princess of Wales reminded me - eventually - that taking yourself too seriously is a sure route to ridicule. Or at least it should be. Sadly it’s a lesson that’s hard to master if your natural habitat is carpeted in red. For all her innate royal talent, Diana was never slow to laugh at herself. Not the studied self- deprecation of some of her in-laws but an instinctive recognition of the comic contradictions of SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 128 being royal in modern Britain. Constitutional monarchy may be a familiar and pragmatic way of supplying ourselves with a head of state. But it still tests our critical faculties to sustain the idea of a superior caste – a caste that exists to give physical form to the temporal power of the nation… and which therefore can claim not only loyalty but also a form of infallibility. Perhaps nobody felt the need to try advising William about his weekend arrangements. Or perhaps they did – and are now paying for it. Palace work is not for the faint-hearted so, if any advisor did cop a royal reprimand for his temerity, I suggest he or she enjoy the office’s free Ascot tickets and try to forget all about it. Luckily for me, William’s mother had a surprisingly strong sense of duty and an eye for the absurd which was usually unerring – even when judging her own behaviour. After a long hard day in the leprosy hospital or the AIDS orphanage or the hospice she was not above bemoaning the fate which had dealt her such a constrained and emotionally fraught life. But it would only take a raised eyebrow from her paid professional conscience (me) to elicit a snort of laughter and a reproach to herself. “What you’re telling me Patrick is ‘just shut up Diana and do your job!’” This is the “job” for which Kate Middleton now appears to be applying. Twenty-five years after Diana joined the royal firm it seems a good time to ask what Ms. M is letting herself in for – and what this might mean for the rest of us… including those who probably don’t instinctively turn to this page when seeking their ration of royal speculation. Twenty-five years ago we were in a comparable position: a popular young prince was summoning up the resolve to marry an undeniably pretty young English rose. A rose who, furthermore, had announced that she was ready for whatever the future held “so long as I have Prince Charles at my side.” Unfortunately, through a combination of bad luck, bad judgement and bad faith, that chance to secure the happy future of the Windsor dynasty was fumbled. Today, the heir to the throne enjoys a marriage which has all the appearance of a dynastic stopgap until once again the lottery of heredity can work its magic on our national future. Only this time, the stakes are that much higher: what odds am I offered for the survival of the Windsors if they slice their next big shot at the goal of workable matrimony? If that sounds a bit unromantic then blame the cynicism injected by years on the front line of the “War of the Waleses.” Before their wedding, an interviewer once asked Charles and Diana if they were in love. “Of course!” smiled Diana. “Whatever ‘in love’ means.” Added Charles. It was surely a fair response from a man of philosophical aspirations. But it left his bride looking distinctly queasy. Let me offer this answer. When it comes to dynastic efficiency, love is best defined by that old marriage guidance formula: it is no more and no less than an ability and a willingness to meet each other’s needs. It was William’s parents’ conspicuous failure to surmount this elementary test that doomed them – and us – to the present royal cul-de-sac. Unfortunately for William and Kate, there is another party to any planned nuptials: us. The capacity of British subjects to view their royal family with benign indifference has been proved SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 129 remarkably elastic over the past two decades. That’s not to say that it is infinite. A rising generation that owes no instinctive deference to the crown puts an ill-defined but definite limit on how much more national embarrassment we are willing to shoulder for the privilege of being a kingdom. Badly handled, William’s marriage may reveal that limit quicker than we think. The omens aren’t uniformly good. Look at what happened the last time the royal party planners threw a wedding. The debacle at Windsor last year is just one example of an alarming erosion of institutional memory in our palaces. An obsession with short-term popularity has taken the place of evolution founded on sound precedent. So it might be safest to remind ourselves – and any royal readers – what lessons Diana’s fate may have left us. As an organisation that prides itself on its history, the royal establishment must already have drawn up its own list. Perhaps it looks like this… First, and rather obviously, the marriage of the future head of state must be built upon the rock of mutual affection and respect, not upon the sand of blind egocentric neediness. For an example of how it can be done we need look no further than the current queen and her consort. From what I could see on Saturday they looked relaxed in each other’s company and they did the job expected of them. Nothing more is required – not bleats to biographers, not leaks to journos, not pop concerts or even humanely baked biscuits. Have William and Kate found that rock? It’s impertinent even to ask. Lucky them if they have – and lucky us too. Second, tiresome though it will be to them and their court, modesty must be their watchword. Modesty about their achievements would be a good start… it’s almost a state secret but most royal work actually comprises turning up wearing the appropriate facial expression. It can be surprisingly difficult but even so it should never be trumpeted as anything particularly arduous – let alone grounds for self-pity - especially to themselves. Eventually William’s mother forgot that good works were what she graced with her presence not what she actually practised. It didn’t make her any easier to work for. Modesty of lifestyle comes a close second. Yes we want royalty that looks royal. But for most people, the palaces and the household cavalry tick the necessary boxes. Extravagant blowouts for purse-proud American social mountaineers have a counterproductive effect – even if it is all for the Prince’s Trust. Not to mention the damage they can do to your ability to spot a crook. Honesty shouldn’t just be something you look for in your dinner guests. Being the fount of national honour doesn’t necessarily translate directly into personal virtue, although there will never be a shortage of false friends to reassure you of your royal high-ness. All the more important that honesty should begin with how you see yourself – because nobody else (except if you’re lucky your darling spouse) will reliably tell you that you’re about to invite derision. Honesty is perhaps most difficult in dealings with the press. Spin doctors and their royal clients offer each other a lethal range of mutual attractions – but there’s only ever one winner. Ask the Duchy accountants how much Charles has spent on communications advice over the past twenty years. Even now, as he grouses about a secretary’s alleged betrayal over a book deal, it SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 130 seems he hasn’t learned that letting the media in is a damned sight easier than getting them out when their usefulness has been exhausted. Contrary to popular belief among royal folk, the media are not the source of all their woes. Out of commercial opportunism, out of mischief and, sometimes, out of naivety, the media have far too often been co-opted by royal press officers into a conspiracy of botched PR. No wonder the correct way to read a modern royal media story is first to ask “who briefed this?” and secondly to wonder why they bothered. So, Ms. Middleton should perhaps try to find out who briefed The Mail on their two-page spread this week disclosing the exciting makeover secrets of Team Kate. Or who is placing the stories that Camilla is guiding her footsteps as she tiptoes into the limelight. Whoever it is, they don’t really have her interests at heart. Finally, on a list that might be endless, loyalty can cover a useful range of royal virtues. Royal flunkeys of all ranks will reliably bow and curtsey but such reflex deference increasingly has to be earned. Every day. Get it right and – who knows? – William and Kate may find it is repaid tenfold. That’s not because they have the fiercest lawyers but because people will always want to think the best of them. Which is not a bad reward for the lifetime of sacrifice we expect them to make. Oh, and while on the subject, try to keep the sacrifices visible. William’s great uncle sacrificed the throne for the woman he loved. His great grandmother sacrificed her family’s safety by staying in London during the blitz. His grandmother publicly sacrificed her life to the service of her people. And his mother is widely seen as having been sacrificed on the altar of dynastic convenience. A bit of visible sacrifice will earn him many weekends of polo, months of skiing and a lifetime of privilege. So, on second thoughts, it might have been wise to decline the polo invite last Saturday - however worthy the cause - and put in an appearance at the royal coal face. The polo and the good causes will always be there. But how many more chances will there be to enjoy Prince Philip’s jokes on the balcony. Duty can still be fun. Apart from anything else, you missed a really super fly-past. SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 131 HELLO! MAGAZINE 1 st May 2007 Download 240.66 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling